STOCKTON - Two police officers were placed on paid leave after shooting a man who was high on PCP when he fired a shotgun at them Saturday night in north Stockton, authorities said Sunday.

Police were called to the 600 block of Cimarron Avenue shortly before 9 p.m. on reports of a disturbance involving a man with a shotgun. When officers arrived, Jeremy Fleming, 20, ran into an open single-car garage, police said.

Fleming, who was later determined to be under the influence of PCP and alcohol, positioned himself behind a vehicle and fired at officers as they approached the garage, said Officer Joe Silva, a spokesman for the Stockton Police Department.

Sgt. Matthew Garlick and Officer Kyle Amant returned fire, wounding Fleming, who was taken to a hospital with multiple non-life-threatening gunshot wounds and later transferred to Stanford Hospital for further treatment on a hand injury, police said.

Garlick and Amant, members of the police department's Community Response Team, were placed on a three-day paid administrative leave, authorities said. Garlick, hired in 2001, also was placed on paid leave in December after a man shot at him during a high-speed vehicle pursuit that ended with a deadly crash near North Pershing Avenue and Interstate 5, police said.

Fleming was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder of a police officer and other weapons-related crimes, authorities said. Silva said the police department has invoked a multiagency protocol investigation to review the case.

The shooting was not Fleming's first encounter with police. In October 2011, officers were called to investigate a suspicious person in the 700 block of North San Joaquin Street. When they arrived, they found Fleming hiding behind bushes, police said. Fleming refused to comply with officers' instructions, pulled a knife from his waistband and threatened police, authorities said.

Fleming ultimately dropped the knife, but officers used pepper spray and a stun gun to subdue him when he tried to walk away, police said. Fleming, who was under the influence of PCP that night, too, was arrested for brandishing a weapon, resisting arrest and being under the influence of a controlled substance, police said.